Car Features

RingBrothers Custom 1969 Dodge Charger

Ringbrothers, the legends of custom car building and billet wizardry, have dropped their latest masterpiece: a 1969 Dodge Charger they’ve named CAPTIV. This beast is no ordinary Charger — it’s packing a street-able 707 horsepower straight from a Mopar Hellcat crate engine, paired with a Tremec six-speed manual that lets you wrestle all that power with precision. The car was built for none other than New Zealand’s motorsports icon and TV personality, Greg Murphy, who had a clear vision from the start.

Velocitys 1969 Ford Bronco – How The Pensacola-based Builder Made Its Turnkey Restomod

The popularity of the classic Bronco has only increased as the years passed, as did its price. Most Broncos are now way too valuable to take to the dirt. Also, nicely built examples easily fetch well into the six figures. What was once a tough and rugged off-roader and ranch rig has now become one of the most collectable and desirable four-wheel drive vehicles ever produced.

A Cool 1936 Plymouth Pickup From Bits And Pieces

By Ray Butters 

 

Mark is nothing if not resourceful. So, together with help from assorted family members, Mark got stuck into the project with a vengeance. Mark had no idea what a 36 Plymouth looked like and he and his family decided to do this assignment together. So, they surfed the internet for photos and ideas and started to work from there.  After having the Plymouth for approximately two years, the build took 5 weekends to complete and has been licensed since 2010.

This 1972 Ford Capri Has Legendary Status

Pulling off the M4 for a quick visit after our shoot, the nostalgia hit me hard. Blue Lagoon, once alive with revving engines, burnouts, and cruisers showing off that classic Durban pose — windows down, low in the seat, arm resting outside the window — has since become a shadow of its former self. The iconic Coconut Grove’s gone, torn down by the municipality years ago, leaving behind a barren wasteland now home mostly to homeless guys and hawkers with pirated DVDs. It’s a sad end to what used to be a beating heart of Durban’s car culture.

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